70 '. .,/ <. ..:ç ::' :; 'It .... :::. . '".:t ."-:-... < ..c :..' :: : : : ., . 0 :.f > . :' A....': .\ .' :./ < ; : ::/ : >:;; . : ;. : .:..".: :.:.>...<. . ....;: \ .' . . .: .: >.. \ .,'. "" \ <:"* :0- "' :.:: ' /"$ ".- 0( ;', . .<; < SO ^,' ; J :::'1 H ;:-':Ji. ": : .::.:: {. .> "';:... . . > . .. ...\, . > ',":': S', ,.. '., , " . ..... ':" '..1<. . A . .'<" y . >: z::: ,; : ':. -:::. ç. , ' :-' ., ;...... . .." Y"...':J. :...'^_.:.. .... > < ',' "; ,: :;; :t: ; /' .... . ... .. .... .j .... . ". ..:. ., ....:. "." . . . . .'. Even though you're not an astronaut (and perhaps have no ambition to become one), you can conquer space and you con- quer time by travelling in France on the crack trains of the French National Railroads... The Railway In France IS an experience in SPEED (we hold the world speed record), COMFORT, PUNCTUALITY (99.6% of our trains are on time), and it is as much of a "Must" as visiting the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre. You can buy your tickets and make reservations for France and Europe before you leave the United States. See your Travel Agent or write us for information about all our services, including "Eurailpass," the Magic Pass. Jóu conquer space, tOO.. . NATIONAL RAI LROADS MARCH 9, 1 9 (, j fer nevertheless helped the Jews, for it is always relatIvely easy to get out of a country illegally, whereas it is nearly impossible to enter the place of refuge without permission and to go on dodg- ing the immigration authorities indefi- nitely. All told, about nine hundred peo- ple-slightly less than half of the small Jewish community in Norway-were successfully smuggled into Sweden. It was in Denmark, however, that the apprehensions of the Foreign Office were most conspicuously justified. The story of Danish Jews is sui generis, and the behavior of the Danish people and their government was unique in all Eu- rope. One is tempted to recommend the history of what happened there as required reading in political science for all students who wish to learn SOme- thing about the enormous potential of non-violent resistance to an opponent possessing vastly superior means of vio- lence. To be sure, there were a few other countries in Europe that lacked proper "understanding of the Jewish question," and actually the majority f . d " d . 1 " o countrIes were oppose to ra Ica and "final" solutions. Sweden, Italy, and Bulgaria proved, like Denmark, to be nearly immune to anti-Semitism, but of the three that were in the German sphere of Influence-that is, excluding Sweden-only the Danes dared speak out on the subject to their German mas- ters. Italy and Bulgaria sabotaged Ger- man orders and indulged in a com- plicated game of double-dealing and double-crossing, saving their Jews by a tour de force of sheer ingenuity, hut they never contested the policy as such. The Danes did. When the Germans approached them rather cautiously about introducIng the yellow badge, the Dan- Ish government officials simply replied that the King would be the first to wear it, and added that anti-Jewish measures of any sort would cause their own immediate resignation. :yforeover, the Germans did not even succeed in intro- ducIng the vitally important distinction hetween native Danes of Jewish origin, of whom there were about sixty-four hundred, and the German-] ewish refu- gees who had found asylum in the coun- try prior to the war-a group, number- ing about fourteen hundred, that had now been declared stateless by the Ger- man government. This refusal must have surprised the Germans no end, since it appeared so "illogical" for a government to protect people to whom it had categorically denied naturaliza- tion, and even permission to work (Lègally, the prewar situation of refu- gees In Denmark was not unlike that in France, but the general corruption 610 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK 20, N. Y. 323 Geary St., San Francisco, Cal. . 9465 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, Cal.. 1500 Stanley St., Montreal, Canada '1' II ...:.:::r;:.... ............ z .. :. t . .' ...::::.... :.".;.: I II !k. 7' .,. <<Y.:"" ":. r .: ";:.: .:.: ::.:. )..... I . ..... &f!t..:: It )1 (J I) l' ;/ . t .... f''t _1 o i( "..ø i S II () I) (f .) '.! ,; " , '. I .. '... 1 \.,: \ ( :.<.:'.' .'!.. . < .. f ' /. j:<.t... . I ,:' .A. '<. .: : . .A: ..;; & ."!'': r .' , : i< ::' :::ilif;Æ " 1..'1" J) 545 MADISON AVE_!. AT 55TH ST.. NEW .:YORK 22 I FOR SEA AND SUN Favorite panty-leg" i! bathing suit in p8ssorted ff ora f f' otton prints. .. B lues or rosy reds" .. : '$jzes 10-1818 95 PLEA$E ADD 50c FOR SJ-ifPPING . i. t.h.. ..; . ::'/:' :$o. '\":. j I